Abstract
If daily isolation lines of P. aurelia are regularly discarded as soon as they go into endomixis, and if these are then replaced by sister lines that have not yet gone into endomixis, it is possible to maintain for long periods lines which have not been in endomixis since the start of this procedure. With this method there were obtained lines of race R which omitted endomixis for as long as 130 days and 350 fissions, and lines of race W which omitted endomixis for 163 days and 303 fissions. At the end of these long periods, all lines died. In the culture of groups of lines selected in this way, there is an initial period during which endomixis does not occur; this is followed by a period in which endomixis occurs in many of the lines (which have to be discarded); during the remaining history, endomixis occurs rarely and eventually not at all, but the death rate rises and results in the final extinction of the group. The details as to the duration of these periods and their characteristic death and endomixis rates differ in different races. The method of selection emphasizes the enormous variability of the interendomictic interval. The extremely long intervals are very rare, and the selection method is simply a device for finding these rare lines and multiplying them.

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